DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

In Palisades visit, Trump officials vow to speed up permits for fire rebuilding

February 5, 2026
in News
In Palisades visit, Trump officials vow to speed up permits for fire rebuilding

In a visit to Pacific Palisades on Wednesday, top White House officials vowed to take over and speed up building permitting, a core state and local function, for rebuilding after the Los Angeles wildfires.

Administrators for the Environmental Protection Agency, Lee Zeldin, and Small Business Administration, Kelly Loeffler, also held a discussion with Palisades fire victims and met with Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and Los Angeles County Supervisor Kathryn Barger in a closed-door meeting about how to hasten rebuilding and address issues such as insurance payouts and wildfire prevention.

“Our conversations with Mayor Bass and Supervisor Barger about accelerating the rebuilding process in Los Angeles were productive,” Zeldin said. “Administrator Loeffler and I, on behalf of President Trump, asked these local elected officials to join us in this urgent effort, and I am hopeful great progress will be made in the days and weeks ahead.”

The visit followed a Jan. 27 executive order signed by President Trump to allow victims of the Eaton and Palisades fires to go around “unnecessary, duplicative, or obstructive” state and local permitting processes.

Instead of going through building departments, such as the City of Los Angeles for the Palisades, or the county for Altadena, builders can instead “self-certify” that they have complied with state and local health and safety standards, if they are using federal emergency funds to rebuild, the order says.

The Small Business Administration has already launched a self-certification tool online, available to applicants who have been waiting more than 60 days for a building permit.

Loeffler said the “check and balance” will come from city and county inspections that must happen before a property is certified for occupancy.

Neither official could immediately recall another instance of the federal government preempting state and local permitting processes for disaster recovery, with Zeldin noting that “nothing like [these wildfires] has ever happened before.”

The visit underscored diverging narratives about the rebuilding process in L.A. While Trump described it as a “nightmare of delay, uncertainty, and bureaucratic malaise” in his executive order, state and local officials said construction is underway and permitting is not the issue.

“Both administrators were engaged — sharing the President’s concerns while also listening to what I am seeing on the ground in Altadena,” Barger said in a statement to The Times. “I emphasized that 53% of impacted residents have taken no action to rebuild, not because of permitting delays, but because they lack the capital to move forward — an issue exacerbated by delayed insurance payouts. Many families have not submitted plans or entered the County’s rebuilding pipeline and are now facing a serious financial crisis.”

She added that the county’s current timeline for completing permit reviews is 31 business days.

Bass, who is facing renewed scrutiny after an analysis of the Palisades fire was watered down, did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Wednesday’s meeting.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a post on X following the executive order, that hundreds of homes are under construction, and that permitting timelines are at least twice as fast as before the fires. He said the president continues to withhold a federal aid package that would help families rebuild.

“The Feds need to release funding, not take over local permit approval speed — the main obstacle is COMMUNITIES NOT HAVING THE MONEY TO REBUILD,” the governor said.

Last month, on the anniversary of the fires, a bipartisan delegation of California legislators also penned a letter to Trump calling for additional federal support.

A December analysis by The Times found that permitting has gained momentum after a slow start, with the pace slower than after some disasters in the state, and faster than others.

As of Wednesday, more than 3,170 rebuilding permits have been issued in the fire areas, according to city and county dashboards.

But Zeldin used the opportunity to take jabs at Newsom, describing his approach to federal funding requests as “flawed.”

“The whole ask has been completely stepped on by the governor’s effort to campaign for president — to try to lob 11 insults a day and somehow fit in an ask for tens of billions of dollars in the middle of it,” he said. “It’s just not a good strategy.”

He declined to say whether additional funding will come from Congress, or how much.

Some Palisades residents said they would welcome whatever support they can get. Among them was Abby Waldorf, whose parents both lost their homes in the Tahitian Terrace mobile home park during the Palisades fire.

Waldorf said mobile homes don’t qualify for many city and state recovery programs, such as mortgage relief and disaster recovery aid, so they are “most at risk of not coming back.”

“Our community is very supportive of anyone that will help us move back quickly,” she said, “and at this point we haven’t seen that happen at the city, county or state level yet, and so anyone who can come in and do the job is welcome.”

The post In Palisades visit, Trump officials vow to speed up permits for fire rebuilding appeared first on Los Angeles Times.

Trump directs ‘all federal law enforcement’ to find Savannah Guthrie’s mother
News

Trump swears he’ll donate winnings in $10 billion lawsuit against his own IRS

by Raw Story
February 5, 2026

President Donald Trump told NBC News’ Tom Llamas in an interview released on Wednesday that he has no interest in ...

Read more
News

Labor unions urge Gov. Gavin Newsom, California lawmakers to rein in artificial intelligence

February 5, 2026
News

Mary Cosby’s son, Robert Jr., released from jail after 2 months, considers time served ‘a blessing’

February 5, 2026
News

Newsom’s freight train going nowhere

February 5, 2026
News

Trump directs ‘all federal law enforcement’ to find Savannah Guthrie’s mother

February 5, 2026
Condescending Vance Tells Kaitlan Collins to ‘Have Some Fun’ After Trump Meltdown

Condescending Vance Tells Kaitlan Collins to ‘Have Some Fun’ After Trump Meltdown

February 5, 2026
Courts are about to unleash a ‘tsunami’ against Trump: Conservative ex-judge

Courts are about to unleash a ‘tsunami’ against Trump: Conservative ex-judge

February 5, 2026
Britney Spears says she’s ‘lucky to be alive’ after how her family treated her: ‘I’m scared of them’

Britney Spears says she’s ‘lucky to be alive’ after how her family treated her: ‘I’m scared of them’

February 5, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026